newsworthy
THE PROLIFERATION OF SELF-DRIVING, OR
autonomous, tractor-trailers threatens the jobs of
nearly 1. 7 million commercial truck drivers, according
to a study by the White House Council of Economic
Advisers (CEA).
The study, released Dec. 20, said the jobs of between
1. 34 million and 1. 67 million truck drivers would be
at risk due to the growing use of heavy-duty vehicles
operated via artificial intelligence. That would equal
80 to 100 percent of all driver jobs listed in the CEA
report, which is based on May 2015 data from the
Bureau of Labor Statistics, a unit of the Department of
Labor. There are about 3. 4 million commercial truck
drivers currently operating in the U.S., according to
various estimates.
The report also predicted that between 165,300 and
495,900 jobs held by light truck or delivery service
drivers would be jeopardized because of autonomous
vehicles. That represents between 20 and 60 percent
of the CEA’s universe of 825,000 driver jobs. Fewer of
those drivers are likely to be displaced, because they
operate in more densely populated urban areas where
the risk of pedestrian deaths or injuries would be greater if autonomous vehicles were used. In addition, many
delivery drivers operate over short distances, so labor
costs would be less of a factor.
CEA estimated that, on a net basis, the use of autonomous vehicles enabled by artificial intelligence would
threaten between 2. 2 million and 3. 1 million full- and
part-time driver jobs of all types; the figure includes
approximately 364,000 self-employed individuals driving with ride-sharing services like Uber and Lyft.
The council emphasized that its calculations exclud-
ed the number or types of new jobs that may be created
as a result of this potential transition. It added that
any changes could take years or decades to materialize
because of a broad lag between what it called “techno-
logical possibility” and widespread adoption.
IS SOLO A NO-GO?
There has been an increasing amount of attention
paid in recent months to the use of autonomous tractor-trailers on the nation’s roads and highways. Many
are leery of massive vehicles with gross weights of up
to 80,000 pounds barreling down a highway without
drivers, and even supporters of the concept said that
dedicated lanes would have to be built to accommodate
the vehicles. Others have speculated that autonomous
vehicle use will be phased in, with human drivers
accompanying the vehicle, though not operating it
except in the event of an emergency.
If fully utilized, autonomous trucks could dramatically drive down labor costs while solving the persistent
problem of finding qualified drivers to ease what
experts believe will be an acute shortage of commercial
drivers in the years to come.
—Mark Solomon
Autonomous heavy-duty trucks
threaten jobs of nearly 1. 7 million
drivers, White House says
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